Published on 7 December 2005
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20 November 2009 - Media allowed to use Kurdish language but still forbidden to discuss Kurdish issues freely
14 October 2009 - Basic questions still unanswered during Dink trial’s 11th hearing
Reporters Without Borders today criticised Turkey’s prosecution of five journalists, who face prison sentences of between 6 months and 10 years, as “further diminishing” the country’s freedom of expression at a time when it is hoping to join the European Union.
The prosecutor-general announced on 3 December he would prosecute the five - well-known columnists Ismet Berkan, Murat Belge, Erol Katircioglu and Haluk Sahin of the centre-left paper Radikal and Hasan Cemal of the centrist daily Milliyet - for criticising the Istanbul administrative court’s ban on a university conference in September about the Armenian question.
The threatened punishment was “totally out of proportion” to the offence, the worldwide press freedom organisation said. “Turkey refuses to allow its journalists to criticise its own institutions. We note that the European Court of Human Rights only yesterday condemned Turkey for jailing a member of the Party for Democracy and Peace (DBT) “.
“The prosecution of these prominent liberal commentators shows that legal action against journalists has become harsher since the new criminal code came into force on 1 June,” it said.
The journalists, who all work for the large media group Dogan, are due to appear before an Istanbul magistrates’ court on 7 February next year to answer a complaint by the Union of Jurists, a Turkish pro-nationalist association of lawyers.
Four of them are being prosecuted under article 301 of the code (also being used in the current trial of the well-known writer Orhan Pamuk) about insulting Turkish identity or “Turkishness” or state institutions (paragraph 1). The article’s paragraph 2 penalises publicly insulting the government, judiciary, army or police. Previously the government had simply used article 125 (“insults by the press”) against journalists.
Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink was given a suspended six-month prison sentence on 7 October for “insulting Turkish identity”. Writer and journalist Emin Karaca was sentenced on 13 September to 5 months in prison and fined €560 under article 301 (2).
He is the editor of Erk, the last opposition newspaper in Uzbekistan until it was banned by the authorities in 1993, and he was jailed on 18 August 1999 in the wave of repression after the failed assassination attempt on President Islam Karimov in Tashkent on 16 February 1999.